This year’s Indonesian forest fires set to surpass 1997 levels

JAKARTA: The forest fires blanketing South-East Asia are on track to become the worst on record, Nasa has warned, in a crisis that has seen thousands of people seek medical treatment, flights grounded and schools closed.

Malaysia, Singapore and large expanses of Indonesia have suffered for weeks from acrid smoke billowing from fires on Indonesian plantations and peatlands that are being illegally cleared by burning.

Though the crisis grips the region nearly ever year during the dry season, scientists predict the current outbreak could surpass 1997 levels, when out-of-control fires sent pollution soaring to record highs in an environmental disaster that cost an estimated US$9bil (RM39.6bil).

Herry Purnomo, a haze expert at the Centre for International Forestry Research, said yesterday that the dry season was not expected to peak in Sumatra island until next month.

“It’s not over yet,” he said, adding that the economic cost of the “horrendous” fires would be as bad as 1997.

If the dry conditions continue, the region could be enveloped in even denser smog.

“Conditions in Singapore and southeastern Sumatra are tracking close to 1997,” Robert Field, a Columbia University scientist based at Nasa’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies, was quoted as saying by the US science agency earlier this week.

“If the forecasts for a longer dry season hold, this suggests 2015 will rank among the most severe events on record.”

Pressure on Indonesia from its neighbours has intensified this year as the fires have raged on.

Singapore officials have reacted with outrage to Indonesian Vice-President Jusuf Kalla’s comments that neighbouring countries should be grateful for good air quality most of the year, and that Jakarta need not apologise for the crisis.

To battle the blazes, Indonesian officials have deployed more than 20,000 troops, police and other personnel to fight the fires through waterbombing and chemically-induced rainfall.

An El Nino weather system has made conditions drier than usual in Indonesia, but authorities are hoping much-needed rains will arrive within a month to finally douse the blazes.

It could be too little too late in Malaysia, where farmers have complained of poor yields due to the haze, and in Singapore where the government has launched legal action against companies blamed for farm and plantation fires.

The annual haze crisis has persisted as plantations expand to meet rising global demand for products like palm oil, a key ingredient in a vast range of everyday consumer products.

The fires smoulder beneath the surface of carbon-rich peatlands, feeding off vast quantities of fuel, making them extremely difficult to curb as millions of tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions are released into the atmosphere.

The Nasa-linked Global Fire Emissions Database has estimated around 600 million tonnes of greenhouse gases have been released as a result of this year’s fires – roughly equivalent to Germany’s entire annual output. — AFP